A drop emitting device that includes a drop generator, a drive signal including a plurality of fire intervals applied to the drop generator, wherein the drive signal includes in each fire interval a bi-polar drop firing waveform or a non-firing waveform.
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1. A drop-emitting apparatus, comprising:
a drop generator;
a drop generating waveform applied to the drop generator during a firing interval if a drop is to be emitted, the drop generating waveform comprising a pulse having a first polarity followed by a pulse having a second polarity followed by a third pulse of either the first or second polarity and magnitude of fifty percent or less than the pulse of the first polarity; and
a non-drop generating waveform applied to the drop generator during the non-firing interval if a drop is not to be emitted, the non-drop generating waveform comprising a single pulse having the second polarity, the single pulse having a duration in a same range of the third pulse, wherein the third pulse and the single pulse each have four segments, the single pulse having a first negative going segment, a second negative going segment, a substantially constant level segment, and a positive going segment.
10. A drop-emitting apparatus, comprising:
a drop generator;
a drop firing waveform applied to the drop generator applied during a firing interval if a drop is to be fired, the drop firing waveform comprising a pulse having a first polarity followed by a pulse having a second polarity followed by a pulse having one of the first or second polarity and a magnitude of fifty percent or less of the pulse having the first polarity; and
a drop non-firing waveform applied to the drop generator during the firing interval if the drop is not to be fired, the drop non-firing waveform having a pulse of the second polarity and a magnitude of fifty percent or less of the pulse having the first polarity and having a duration in a same range as the pulse in the firing waveform having a magnitude of fifty percent or less of the pulse having the first polarity, wherein the pulse having one of the first or second polarity in the firing waveform and the pulse of the second polarity in the non-firing waveform each have four segments, the pulse of the second polarity having a first negative going segment, a second negative going segment, a substantially constant level segment, and a positive going segment.
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Drop on demand ink jet technology for producing printed media has been employed in commercial products such as printers, plotters and facsimile machines. Generally, an ink jet image is formed by selective placement on a receiver surface of ink drops emitted by a plurality of drop generators implemented in a printhead or a printhead assembly. For example, the printhead assembly and the receiver surface are caused to move relative to each other and drop generators are controlled to emit drops at appropriate times, for example by an appropriate controller. The receiver surface may be a transfer surface, the image printed upon it is subsequently transferred to an output print medium such as paper.
A known ink jet drop generator structure employs an electromechanical transducer to displace ink from an ink chamber in a drop forming outlet passage, and it may be difficult to control drop velocity and/or drop mass.
The ink 33 may be melted or phase changed solid ink, and the electromechanical transducer 39 may be a piezoelectric transducer that is operated in a bending mode, for example.
The time varying non-firing waveform may be configured to set the condition of the drop generator 30 for the next fire interval. For example, the time varying non-firing waveform 52 may be shaped or configured to place the drop generator 30 in an electromechanical and fluid dynamics condition similar to the electromechanical and fluid dynamics condition the drop generator 30 would be in after firing a drop. In this manner, the drop generator 30 is placed in substantially the same electromechanical and fluid dynamics condition each time the drop generator fires, which may provide for more consistent drop velocity and/or drop mass over a broad range of operating conditions.
As another example, the time varying non-firing waveform 52 may be shaped or configured to reduce variation in drop velocity such that drop velocity is approximately constant regardless of whether a given drop firing waveform follows a drop firing waveform or a non-firing waveform. In other words, the drop velocity is not substantially affected by the firing pattern.
Also, the time varying non-firing waveform 52 may be shaped or configured to reduce variation in drop mass such that drop mass is approximately constant regardless of whether a given drop firing waveform follows a drop firing waveform or a non-firing waveform. In other words, drop mass is not substantially affected by the firing pattern.
The time varying non-firing waveform 52 may further be shaped or configured to change a drop parameter when a given drop firing waveform follows a non-firing waveform.
As an example, as depicted in
The time varying non-firing waveform may be a uni-polar voltage signal such as a pulse that may be positive or negative, for example relative to a reference. A non-firing pulse may have a pulse duration that is less than a fire interval, for example, wherein pulse duration may be measured for convenience between pulse transition times, which is the transition from the reference and the transition to the reference). A non-firing pulse may be located anywhere in a fire interval. For example a non-firing pulse may be approximately centered in a fire interval or it may be located only in either the first half or the second half of a fire interval. By way of specific example, the time varying non-firing waveform may be a negative going pulse having a width that is in the range of about 10% to about 90% of the firing interval T, or about 0.1 T to about 0.9 T as an example.
As an example, as depicted in
The positive pulse 61 may have a duration D61 in the range of about 7 microseconds to about 12 microseconds. The first negative pulse 71 may have a duration D71 in the range of about 3 microseconds to about 6 microseconds. The second negative pulse 72 may have a duration D72 in the range of about 3 microseconds to about 5 microseconds. The negative pulse 81 of the time varying non-firing waveform 52 may have a duration D81 in the range of about 3 microseconds to about 5 microseconds.
The positive pulse 61 may have a peak magnitude M61 in the range of about 30 volts to about 50 volts. The positive pulse may include, for example, four segments: a first positive going segment 61A, a second positive going segment 61B, a substantially constant level segment 61C, and a negative going segment 61D. The first positive going segment 61A is steeper than the second positive going segment 61B and the negative going segment 61D is less steep than both positive going segments of positive pulse 61.
The first negative pulse 71 may have a magnitude M71 in the range of about 30 volts to about 50 volts. The first negative pulse may include, for example, four segments: a first negative going segment 71A, a second negative going segment 71B, a substantially constant level segment 71C, and a positive going segment 71D. The first negative going segment 71A is steeper than the second negative going segment 71B and the negative going segment 71D is steeper than the second negative going segment 71B of the first negative pulse 71.
In operation, the third pulse 72 of the time varying firing waveform 51 resets the meniscus of the drop generator 30 to prepare it for the next firing interval. This third pulse 72 leaves the drop generator 30 in a desired resonant state. The voltage and timing of the third pulse 72 may affect the electromechanical and fluid dynamic resonant state of the drop generator 30. The voltage of the third pulse may be selected for a specific drop mass difference between drops emitted at a given frequency or corresponding image pattern and drops emitted at a different frequency or image pattern.
For example, the polarity of the third pulse 72 and the magnitude of the voltage of the third pulse 72 relative to the voltage of the first pulse 61 may be adjusted from about 0% to about 50% in both polarities for a specific difference in drop mass during operation when the drop generator 30 is controlled in such a way as to emit drops at a given firing frequency as compared to the drop mass generated when the drop generator 30 is controlled in such a way as to emit drops at a different firing frequency. For example, the magnitude of the third pulse 72 of the time varying firing waveform 51 may be set from about −50% voltage compared to the magnitude of the first positive pulse 61 to about 50% voltage compared to the magnitude of the first positive pulse 61 for a desired drop mass difference between drop emitted at about 43 kHz compared to drops emitted at about 11 kHz or drops emitted as a pattern with an approximate fire rate of 11 kHz.
The third pulse 72 of the time varying firing waveform 51 may have a peak magnitude M72 that is in the range of about 15 volts or less. As an example, as depicted in
As an example, as depicted in
The negative pulse 81 of the time varying non-firing waveform 52 may have a magnitude in the range of about 5 volts to about 10 volts. The negative pulse 81 of the time varying non-firing waveform 52 may include, for example, four segments: a first negative going segment 81A, a second negative going segment 81B, a substantially constant level segment 81C, and a positive going segment 81D. The first negative going segment 81A is steeper than the second negative segment 81B and the positive going segment 81D is steeper than the second negative going segment 81B.
Generally, the firing waveform 51 will comprise, in sequence, a first pulse having a first polarity, a second pulse having a second polarity, a delay, and a third pulse having a first or second polarity. Similarly, the non-firing waveform 52 will generally comprise a pulse having a second polarity relative to the firing waveform 51.
It will be appreciated that several of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Also that various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.
Williams, Brian Edward, Stephens, Terrance Lee
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